"The only way to do great work is to love what you do"
About this Quote
Jobs isn’t offering a gentle poster-slogan about job satisfaction; he’s laying down a founding myth for a particular kind of ambition. “The only way” is the tell. It’s absolutist, slightly impatient, and strategically unforgiving: if you’re not producing “great work,” the problem isn’t the market, your boss, your luck, or even your skills. It’s your love. That move does two things at once. It romanticizes labor (work as passion, not obligation), and it privatizes failure (if you’re not exceptional, you must not want it enough).
The line lands because it fits the Jobs persona and the Apple narrative: obsessive focus, aesthetic purity, the idea that products carry the emotional fingerprint of their maker. In the context of his Stanford commencement address, it’s also a clean redemption arc. Jobs had been fired from Apple, rebuilt his reputation, returned triumphant. “Love what you do” reads less like advice than like an alibi for volatility: the punishing hours, the perfectionism, the brusque standards. Love becomes the moral justification for intensity.
The subtext is cultural as much as personal. Late-20th-century creative capitalism wanted workers who internalized the company mission as identity. Jobs gives that era its most quotable mandate. It’s inspiring, yes, because it grants permission to chase meaning over security. It’s also a little dangerous, because once “love” becomes the prerequisite for “great,” burnout starts looking like a character flaw rather than an economic reality.
The line lands because it fits the Jobs persona and the Apple narrative: obsessive focus, aesthetic purity, the idea that products carry the emotional fingerprint of their maker. In the context of his Stanford commencement address, it’s also a clean redemption arc. Jobs had been fired from Apple, rebuilt his reputation, returned triumphant. “Love what you do” reads less like advice than like an alibi for volatility: the punishing hours, the perfectionism, the brusque standards. Love becomes the moral justification for intensity.
The subtext is cultural as much as personal. Late-20th-century creative capitalism wanted workers who internalized the company mission as identity. Jobs gives that era its most quotable mandate. It’s inspiring, yes, because it grants permission to chase meaning over security. It’s also a little dangerous, because once “love” becomes the prerequisite for “great,” burnout starts looking like a character flaw rather than an economic reality.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Source | Unverified source: You've Got to Find What You Love (Stanford Commencement) (Steve Jobs, 2005)
Evidence: Primary source: Stanford University’s official posting of the prepared text of Steve Jobs’ Commencement Address, delivered June 12, 2005. The line appears in the speech as: “And the only way to do great work is to love what you do.” This is the earliest clearly documentable primary publication/sp... Other candidates (2) Steve Jobs (Steve Jobs) compilation97.7% u believe is great work and the only way to do great work is to love what you do The Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs: Insanely Different ... (Carmine Gallo, 2010) compilation95.0% ... the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven't found it yet, keep looking. Don't settle. As... |
| Featured | This quote was our Quote of the Day on August 16, 2023 |
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